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Cleveland Barons : 1–0–0 ... Los Angeles's draft picks at the 1977 NHL amateur draft held at the Mount Royal ... Player Nationality College/Junior/Club team ...
The Los Angeles Kings earned 58 points to finish fourth in the West Division. This was the first playoff series of the Battle of California and the first playoff meeting between two California-based NHL teams. Los Angeles earned ten of sixteen points in this year's regular season series. The Kings defeated the Seals in the only game seven of ...
The 1967 National Hockey League (NHL) expansion added six new franchises for the 1967–68 season, doubling the size of the league to 12 teams.It was the largest expansion undertaken at one time by an established major sports league and the first change in the composition of the NHL since 1942, ending the era of the Original Six.
In their two years in Cleveland, Larry Hirsch [10] served as the Barons' radio play-by-play announcer on WJW. [11] On the television side, WUAB channel 43 [12] did a very limited schedule with Steve Albert [13] and Dick Hammer [14] on commentary in 1976–77, and perhaps only one game in 1977–78 with Charlie Steiner and Pete Franklin on ...
The 1971–72 Los Angeles Kings season was the Kings' fifth season of operation in the National Hockey League (NHL). The Kings finished in last place in the West Division and did not qualify for the playoffs.
The 1977–78 Cleveland Barons season was the team's eleventh and final season in the NHL. The relocation to Cleveland did not cure the attendance problems that plagued the franchise from its inception in Oakland as the Seals in 1967.
Los Angeles descended into chaos Wednesday night as belligerent baseball fans set a bus on fire while others clashed with cops and looters ran amok following the Dodgers’ World Series victory.
The six existing teams were grouped into the newly created East Division, and the expansion teams—the Los Angeles Kings, Minnesota North Stars, Oakland Seals, Philadelphia Flyers, Pittsburgh Penguins and St. Louis Blues—formed the West Division. The NHL added another six teams by 1974 to bring the league to 18 teams.